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author | Zhiming Wang <zmwangx@gmail.com> | 2015-09-01 11:29:49 +0800 |
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committer | Zhiming Wang <zmwangx@gmail.com> | 2015-09-01 11:29:49 +0800 |
commit | ce9dd124a2c1e07918010ae95b16aa780653a1e6 (patch) | |
tree | 6f67717d91e47c1627f4e15fd9f3558173065339 /source | |
parent | 31ef59e4af338a79a296db544072dbc1b2b1ac7f (diff) | |
download | my_new_personal_website-ce9dd124a2c1e07918010ae95b16aa780653a1e6.tar.xz my_new_personal_website-ce9dd124a2c1e07918010ae95b16aa780653a1e6.zip |
Latest post: add a follow-up
Also, "non anti-aliased" => "non-anti-aliased".
Diffstat (limited to 'source')
-rw-r--r-- | source/blog/2015-08-31-after-all-these-years-10pt-non-anti-aliased-monaco-is-still-the-best.md | 12 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/source/blog/2015-08-31-after-all-these-years-10pt-non-anti-aliased-monaco-is-still-the-best.md b/source/blog/2015-08-31-after-all-these-years-10pt-non-anti-aliased-monaco-is-still-the-best.md index cf243960..59b672b9 100644 --- a/source/blog/2015-08-31-after-all-these-years-10pt-non-anti-aliased-monaco-is-still-the-best.md +++ b/source/blog/2015-08-31-after-all-these-years-10pt-non-anti-aliased-monaco-is-still-the-best.md @@ -1,16 +1,18 @@ --- -title: "After all these years, 10pt non anti-aliased Monaco is still the best" +title: "After all these years, 10pt non-anti-aliased Monaco is still the best" date: 2015-08-31T06:31:03+08:00 date-display: August 31, 2015 --- Ars Technica [just ran a piece](http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/08/open-source-typeface-hack-brings-design-to-source-code/) on the open source programming font [Hack](https://github.com/chrissimpkins/Hack). Now I don't really know why this is news-worthy (open source programming fonts aren't a new thing), but I thought I'd give it a try. -The result is unsurprising. I've loved my 10pt non anti-aliased Monaco for years, beginning with the Pro profile of Terminal.app. In fact, I initially refused to use iTerm2 precisely because I can't reproduce my beloved typeface in it, until I found out the non anti-aliasing trick. This time again, Hack simply can't compete with my favorite font; see the screenshots below. Among other things, it is way too thick for my liking — the same problem that haunts a whole range of programming fonts. Note that Hack is [supposed to](https://github.com/chrissimpkins/Hack#about) look good at 8px–12px according to its README, but I tested it at 9pt–12pt in iTerm2 (I know, pt is supposed to be larger than px, but I seriously doubt that anyone would want 8px or 6pt as their daily font size — and for that matter iTerm2 doesn't even allow me to go below 9pt, a pretty reasonable restriction, I'd say). +The result is unsurprising. I've loved my 10pt non-anti-aliased Monaco for years, beginning with the Pro profile of Terminal.app. In fact, I initially refused to use iTerm2 precisely because I can't reproduce my beloved typeface in it, until I found out the non anti-aliasing trick. This time again, Hack simply can't compete with my favorite font; see the screenshots below. Among other things, it is way too thick for my liking — the same problem that haunts a whole range of programming fonts. Note that Hack is [supposed to](https://github.com/chrissimpkins/Hack#about) look good at 8px–12px according to its README, but I tested it at 9pt–12pt in iTerm2 (I know, pt is supposed to be larger than px, but I seriously doubt that anyone would want 8px or 6pt as their daily font size — and for that matter iTerm2 doesn't even allow me to go below 9pt, a pretty reasonable restriction, I'd say). -By the way, it is worth pointing out that the very same Monaco looks horrible at 9pt or 11pt, anti-aliased or not (same goes for 10pt anti-aliased). 10pt non anti-aliased Monaco is simply a miracle. +By the way, it is worth pointing out that the very same Monaco looks horrible at 9pt or 11pt, anti-aliased or not (same goes for 10pt anti-aliased). 10pt non-anti-aliased Monaco is simply a miracle. -![Pro profile in Apple's Terminal.app, with 10pt non anti-aliased Monaco. That says something about the font's quality, especially on a dark background.](/img/20150831-terminal-app-pro-profile.png) +**09/01/2015 update:** Looks like I was quite confused about pt and px, and they are to be used interchangeably in the current context. I suggest that anyone interested in this subject also read John Gruber's two very informative pieces from 2003, [*Anti-Aliasing*](http://daringfireball.net/2003/03/antialiasing.html) and [*Anti-Anti-Aliasing*](https://daringfireball.net/2003/03/anti-anti-aliasing). -![10pt non anti-aliased Monaco is life.](/img/20150831-monaco-10pt-non-antialiased.png) +![Pro profile in Apple's Terminal.app, with 10pt non-anti-aliased Monaco. That says something about the font's quality, especially on a dark background.](/img/20150831-terminal-app-pro-profile.png) + +![10pt non-anti-aliased Monaco is life.](/img/20150831-monaco-10pt-non-antialiased.png) ![Hack, anti-aliased, at 9pt, 10pt, 11pt and 12pt, respectively. Click to enlarge.](/img/20150831-hack-8,9,10,11pt-antialiased-combined.png) |